Japanese design studio Nendo has completed a redevelopment plan for floors one to five of the Siam Discovery retail complex in Bangkok, Thailand, covering both interior and exterior design

The eco-minded studio worked on the environmental design for the common use areas and also all of the self-curated retail space, which comprises the majority of the site

Rather than categorising merchandise by brand, the experience is organised around the theme of a 'lifestyle laboratory'

Nendo blended the finishes on the floors and ceilings in the common areas and retail spaces in a gradated way, which gives the impression that different materials are stirred together

They designed everything from a transparent rocking horse to a line of T-shirts featuring Hello Kitty targeted at a male audience. The project has been developed over the course of two years on a scale never before seen

Nendo designed motifs at 13 different locations around the sales floors. They include laboratory equipment such as beakers, flasks, and test-tubes, and diagrams of molecular structures, nucleotide DNA sequences, microscopes and amoeba, smoke and bubbles

The retail points designed by Nendo include spaces for electronics featuring displays that reference microscopes. Their lens-like forms provide surfaces for displaying merchandise illuminated by integrated lighting

We’ve become accustomed to Japanese design studio Nendo delivering its quirky signature creative take on products and spaces; from a chocolate bar that creates different tastes via diverse textures, to a collective bird-apartment tree house and library-inspired pop-up for Starbucks.

The firm's largest and most ambitious project to date continues the studio’s original approach with a revolutionary new story-telling interpretation of the traditional department store retail experience.

The two-year project has transformed Bangkok’s 18-year-old Siam Discovery department store, now centred around a ‘lifestyle laboratory’ theme that eschews the traditional categorisation of products by brand. Instead, an unconventional open plan ‘Exploratorium’ offers a series of lifestyle experiences around ‘laboratories’ designed to create the sort of comforting, emotional experience lacking in e-commerce.

The renovation of the 40,000 sq m mall also addresses the building’s unusually narrow frontage. Here, Nendo extended and combined numerous existing circular atriums dotted throughout the building to create an airy elongated 58m space.

Frame-shaped boxes with video monitors (202 of them), digital signage and displays of merchandise were installed along one side of the atrium, creating an easy-to-navigate visual directory for the whole store, while escalators were repositioned to run through the atrium, facilitating a smoother flow of visitors.

Meanwhile, the unconventional new double-skinned facade glass is decorated with a pattern that reflects the 'stacked box' atrium installation.

The designers reworked the interiors for all common use areas and most of the self-curated retail spaces, gradating floor and ceiling finishes to give the impression that different materials are stirred together.

‘In this way, we made a point of creating an atmosphere where people can feel relaxed and feel free to approach the stores,’ says Nendo founder Oki Sato.

Thank you for registering to the newsletter

By submitting your details, you'll also receive emails from Time Inc. UK,
publisher of Wallpaper* and
other iconic brands about its
goods and
services, and those of its carefully selected third parties.

Please tick here if you'd prefer not to hear about:

Time Inc.'s goods & services, including all the
latest news, great deals and offersThird party goods & services